Weird News ε' - The fifth column

Philippines: Student 'anti-cheating' exam hats go viral​

Images of students wearing so-called "anti-cheating hats" during college exams have gone viral on social media in the Philippines, sparking amusement.
Students at one college in Legazpi City were asked to wear headgear that would prevent them peeking at others' papers.
Many responded by creating homemade contraptions out of cardboard, egg boxes and other recycled materials.
Their tutor told the BBC she had been looking for a "fun way" to ensure "integrity and honesty" in her classes.
Mary Joy Mandane-Ortiz, a professor of mechanical engineering at Bicol University College of Engineering, said the idea had been "really effective".
It was implemented for recent mid-term exams, which were sat by hundreds of students at the college in the third week of October.

Prof Mandane-Ortiz said her initial request had been for students to make a "simple" design out of paper.
She was inspired by a technique reportedly used in Thailand some years previously.
In 2013, an image went viral appearing to show a room of university students in Bangkok taking test papers while wearing "ear flaps" - sheets of paper stuck to either side of their head to obscure their vision.

Prof Mandane-Ortiz said her engineers-in-training took the idea and ran with it - in some cases innovating complex headgear in "just five minutes" with any junk they found lying around.
Others donned hats, helmets or Halloween masks to fulfil the brief.

A string of the professor's Facebook posts - showing the youngsters wearing their elaborate creations - garnered thousands of likes in a matter of days, and attracted coverage from Filipino media outlets.

They also reportedly inspired schools and universities in other parts of the country to encourage their own students to put together anti-cheating headwear.
Prof Mandane-Ortiz said her tutees performed better this year, having been motivated by the strict examination conditions to study extra hard.
Many of them finished their tests early, she added - and nobody was caught cheating this year.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-63363473
 
1666557204963.png


Eh, wouldn't this make it really easy to wear an earpiece? :mischief:
You could even communicate to the other side in code, by tapping your helmet/hat/other.
 
I was thinking you could put a mirror in some of those to make it easier to see others papers. I wonder what that person at the back is wearing?
 

Iranian man who didn't wash for half a century dies at 94​

A hermit dubbed by media as "the world's dirtiest man" has died at the age of 94, just months after having his first wash in decades.
Amou Haji had refused to use soap and water for more than half a century, fearing it would make him sick.
The Iranian, who lived in the southern province of Fars, had avoided previous attempts by villagers to get him clean.
But, local media say, Amou Haji finally succumbed to pressure and washed a few months ago.
According to Iran's IRNA news agency, he became ill shortly afterwards and died on Sunday.
In a previous interview, given to the Tehran Times in 2014, he revealed his favourite meal was porcupine, and that he lived between a hole in the ground and a brick shack built by concerned neighbours in the village of Dejgah.

He told the outlet at the time his unusual choices were down to "emotional setbacks" when he was younger.
Years of not bathing had left him with skin covered in "soot and pus", IRNA said, while his diet had consisted of rotten meat and unsanitary water drunk from an old oil can.

He was also fond of smoking, being pictured on at least one occasion puffing on more than one cigarette at once.
Attempts to bathe him, or offer him clean water to drink, made him sad, the news agency said.
However, whether he holds the record for having gone the longest without taking a bath has been a matter of some debate. Back in 2009, there were reports of an Indian man who had - at that point - not washed or brushed his teeth for 35 years. What had happened to him since was not immediately clear.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-63389045
 

Animal rescue tries to capture cow that escaped from Manorville farm​


An animal rescue group is trying to track down a 750-pound cow that escaped a farm in Manorville.
Strong Island Animal Rescue says “Vienna” escaped from Jerry's Farms on Wading River Road three weeks ago and has been on the loose ever since.
The cow was last seen by a group of golfers at the Pine Hill Golf and Club in Manorville. It wasn't clear exactly when a video of the cow making its way across the fairway was taken. The rescue group posted the video on social media on Friday.
Long Islanders who spoke with News 12 Long Island said they were shocked to hear another bovine is on the move. "Barney the Bull" got loose last summer and was captured.
"We hope we can locate where she is. We're asking everyone to please stay back, let the professionals do what they have got to do," says Frankie Floridia, from Strong Island Animal Rescue.
Floridia says he and Eddie Stepinski from K9 Search and Rescue will be searching for Vienna.
"We'll put up cameras in the area and put out special food for the cow. Hopefully when the cow comes to eat it, it will come back for more," Stepinski says.
If found, the owner has agreed to surrender the cow and Floridia will bring it to Skylands Animal Sanctuary and Rescue in New Jersey. She will live out the rest of her life there -- and maybe even see Barney the Bull.
 
Wait. I can not-wash as well.
 
unless you are around 90 , you should be safe ?
 
Sometimes the journey of many miles ends very badly

Deer swims all the way to P.E.I. only to be struck by transport truck​

Diane Griffin was about to cross the Confederation Bridge on her way to New Brunswick on Tuesday when she pulled off to the side of the road to take a phone call.

Then, as she looked out her windshield, she thought she saw a white-tailed deer come up over the bank and graze in the grass.

Could it be? Deer are not native to P.E.I.

How did it get here? Should she hang up and call the authorities?

The intrigue then turned to shock.

"All of a sudden right in front of me it dashed across the road onto the pavement and a big transfer truck was coming off of the bridge and just, smuck. The poor deer was killed instantly."

Officials with P.E.I.'s Department of Fish and Wildlife believe the deer is the first to successfully swim across the Northumberland Strait.

"There are no known white-tailed deer on P.E.I. but they are common in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia," the department said in an email to CBC.

"We have occasionally collected dead deer on South Shore beaches that were presumed to have drowned."

The deer was brought to the Atlantic Veterinary College. Due to the condition of the animal after the collision, little information could be obtained, but officials believe the deer was only on P.E.I. a short time before it was killed.

Griffin, a retired senator from P.E.I., said the incident "kept me awake" during the rest of her trip.

"We're not used to seeing them. It's when we go over to the New Brunswick side of the Confederation Bridge that most of us start to get more cautious about worrying about deer or moose," she said.

"So it was very intriguing to even see the deer here to start with, but to see it hit such an end so suddenly was a pretty powerful thing to have happened."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-deer-confederation-bridge-killed-1.6630296
 

California's cannabis-growing nuns pray for profits​

Merced County sits in the middle of California's Central Valley.
For as far as the eye can see, there are identical rows of crops, with the occasional farmhouse or family home.
One of these homes looks unassuming from the outside.
There's nothing unusual about the building or the land around it, except that there's a small group of women, wearing pristine white habits, burning incense, and singing hymns as they walk in step blessing their cannabis plants.
These women are the "Sisters of the Valley," better known as the Weed Nuns.
Lead by Sister Kate, the women are members of a self-proclaimed enclave of nuns who identify as healers and feminists, but more importantly, business people. They do not represent an official religion.

"I chose an industry that is messed up," Sister Kate says. "It's going to probably be messed up and I'm probably going to have to do a lot of dancing and sidestepping."
She's referring to all the confusing technicalities in the laws surrounding California's cannabis industry.
California is home to the so-called "green rush" of cannabis production. It was the first state to legalise medical marijuana in 1996, and recreational use has been legal since 2016.


The state's law, however, is full of regulatory loopholes, which means the legality of marijuana cultivation varies from county to county and city to city.
So while it's legal to use cannabis in the state, nearly two-thirds of California cities have banned marijuana businesses, with others making it extremely difficult to obtain permits.
This means that for the Sisters of the Valley, growing their 60 plants outside, here in Merced County, does not fall within the law.

"The sheriffs know that, they just let me do this," admits Sister Kate. "But there's really no reason for them to let me.
"They could have shut me down by now just because it's illegal to grow hemp [cannabis] in this county.
"But I think that they know we will just challenge the law and get it changed then in the county… And I think they know it would be a fight they don't want to undertake."
There's a second home on the property which the sisters call "the abbey"- it's where all the medicine-making takes place.
Sister Camilla carefully pours super-strength CBD oil into tincture bottles.
They produce and sell all their own hemp-based medicines and salves, a business that before the pandemic was grossing $1.2m a year (£1m).

Despite praying for, and blessing every batch, they're now making half that.
Selling through dispensaries might help them rebuild, but that would mean even more regulations, and higher taxes.

Twenty miles down the road, in downtown Merced, Joel Rodriguez, who runs the local cannabis shop, is operating legally.
However, California has put so many taxes in place on the cannabis supply chain, Mr Rodrigez says it is putting people out of business, or pushing people to operate outside the legal regulations.
He is one of many cannabis businesses in California that complain of stifling taxes and high operating costs.
"Dealing with the tax rates as well as having the overheads that black-market dealers don't have to deal with - rent insurance payroll, just basic stuff like internet - those kinds of things we have to deal with everyday, we can't write that off, and that all goes into the end cost for the customer."
The initial application fee for a retail license in California is $1,000.
After that there are annual state administrative and regulatory fees that can add up to tens of thousands of dollars a year for small businesses, and close to $100,000 for larger operations.
Operating legally is much more expensive than operating illegally, acting as an incentive to dealers.
The illegal trade in marijuana is estimated to be worth around $8bn, roughly twice as big as the legal trade in California in 2021.
One underground dealer, who did not want to be identified by name, says he can offer a better product and make more profit by working outside legal parameters.
"Just trying to get that license is going to cost you about a million dollars," he says. "And in the industry that we're in, you can accumulate a million dollars just off of doing what you're doing by making it available to everyone who doesn't have a card or doesn't have a car to get to a club."

Throughout California, those who once arrested people for cannabis offences now embrace legal businesses.
"We need to make it a little bit easier for those folks that are doing it lawfully," says Chief Ruben Chavez of the Gustine Police Department in the Central Valley. "Make it easier for them to be able to produce the product and not have to go through so many hoops."
So far this year, California has received nearly $580m dollars in tax revenue and Chief Ruben believes easing regulations would lead to more revenue for his city and help his department's efforts to eradicate the illegal trade.
"Our resources are dwindling," he says. "But if we can get some revenue, some assistance, not only from the state, maybe from the Feds to go after those folks that are doing it illegally… If you stop the illegal growers, the illegal operations a little more, I think the lawful, business community will pick up more [revenue]."
That approach would benefit growers like the Weed Nuns, Sister Kate says.
"The truth is, I'd love for them to permit us, because that would be a win. And because we believe in paying taxes."
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-63393214
 
ı can't tell which is weirder . That the UAE has a goverment minister for tolerance , he was in a graduation ceremony and some girl was happy in a series of movement that might have been termed a "dance" and the minister threw her diploma on a table , because hey , tolerance 'cause it might have been 30 lashes instead , whether it is all fiction or am surprised in either way at the spectacles of the Anglosaxon owned , so called Islam of the Gulf ?
 
Piet Mondrian artwork displayed upside down for 75 years

An artwork by the abstract Dutch painter Piet Mondrian has been hanging upside down in various galleries for 75 years, an art historian has said.​
Despite the recent discovery, the work, entitled New York City I, will continue to be displayed the wrong way up to avoid it being damaged.​
The 1941 picture was first put on display at New York's MoMA in 1945.​
It has hung at the art collection of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia in Düsseldorf since 1980.​
Curator Susanne Meyer-Büser noticed the longstanding error when researching the museum's new show on the artist earlier this year, but warned it could disintegrate if it was hung the right side up now.​

 

Attacked owl rescued by fishing crew 100 miles out to sea​

A long-eared owl shocked crew on board a fishing boat over 100 miles off the north coast of Scotland.
The bird was rescued by a crew member who spotted it being attacked by seagulls.
It suffered minor injuries but was cared for by the team on board Peterhead-registered Benarkle II for the rest of their trip.
It is believed the owl had been blown off its normal course before landing on the boat.
The Benarkle II crew said the poorly creature perked up a great deal after being "beefed up" with some chopped steak.
After returning to harbour, the owl was handed over to the Huntly Falconry Centre who said it was very unusual for it to have been so far from land.

Crew members said the bird appeared on board the trawler in the middle of their trip last week - and seemed perfectly happy once it had settled into its new surroundings.

A social media post from the team added: "[It] was starting to become used to the comings and goings of crew in the wheelhouse, even letting him out to stretch his wings.

"Although getting an unwilling owl to go back into his temporary home isn't the easiest of operations!"
Once the trawler returned to Peterhead, the owl was taken to the Huntly Falconry Centre to fully recover.

John Barrie, who owns the centre, said: "The owl is just tired after the journey.
"They'd fed it up on the boat, and we'll do the same here.

"It just needs a bit of beef on it.
"It'll be here for a week or two then released back into the wild."

Mr Barrie said the bird was over 100 miles out from the coast.
He added: "It wasn't in its own environment, it must've just got blown off course.
"These same guys brought in a hobby falcon a couple years ago and it was about 400 miles out.
"It's funny that that's twice they've brought in a bird. There's obviously someone on board who knows about birds."

Long-eared owls are known for their distinct white eyebrows and striking bright orange eyes.
Despite being called the long-eared owl, the tufts on its head aren't actually ears at all.
The large head feathers are simply used to make it look bigger when the bird is alarmed.

They are said to be the most nocturnal of all the owls.
The breed looks deceptively long and thin while flying, but is usually no larger than a woodpigeon.
And they traditionally prefer dense coniferous woodlands to being at sea.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-63425826
 
Thats nothing new, even BLM promoted such nonsense about melanin = superiority altho it's probably since been scrubbed.
 

Not only does swearing feel good — it's also good for you: study​

Psychologists reviewed 100 studies on the consequences of cussing, and found it to be a powerful tool

Taking notes while someone holds their hand in freezing cold water and hurls profanities may seem like an odd way to spend an afternoon, but for Richard Stephens, it's just another day at the office.

Stephens and his colleagues study the psychological effects of swearing. And according to their recent review of available research on the topic, swearing helps people tolerate pain, ease stress, build and maintain interpersonal connections, and in some cases, be more persuasive.

"I think [these studies are] really kind of putting a scientific stamp on what most people know anyway," Stephens, a psychologist and lecturer at Keele University in England, told As It Happens host Nil Köksal.

"People know if they hurt themselves, it's a good idea to swear because it seems to help. People know it helps express frustration."

Stephens and his colleagues reviewed 100 academic papers from different disciplines about the consequences of cussing, including their own research. Their findings were published in the journal Lingua.

Cursing to make friends and influence people​

Several studies over the years have highlighted the social benefits of swearing. They found it can build a sense of camaraderie and solidarity within a group, especially if that group faces adversity or outside opposition.

Other studies have suggested that swearing can help create a sense of trust and intimacy among co-workers, sports teams and friend groups.

It's even effective at forging "parasocial" relationships — one-sided bonds where a person feels close to someone they don't actually know, usually a celebrity or an influencer — according to a 2017 analysis of controversial YouTuber PewDiePie.

Stephens says swearing's social power stems from the fact that it's frowned upon in many professional and social settings. Cursing, therefore, can feel very intimate and authentic.

"The idea is that if someone is speaking and they're swearing, that they're speaking in an unfiltered way," he said. "They're not managing how they look or sound to other people. And so, you know, theoretically, that should make you think, well, they're being honest."

In some cases, Stephens said, this even helps people to be more persuasive — with some caveats.

"It does seem to depend on what your initial beliefs are, because if you strongly disagree with someone and they start swearing, that gives you a reason to carry on strongly disagreeing. It gives you a reason to dislike them," he said. "So it is a bit nuanced, that one."

The healing power of a potty mouth​

But it's not all social. Some of swearing's power is deeply personal. For example, Stephens says it's a tremendous tool for pain management.

This is Stephens' area of expertise. He and his colleagues have published several studies about swearing and pain.

Most recently, their 2020 study found people can hold their hand in freezing cold water longer if they're repeating a swear word. Repeating a neutral word didn't have the same effect.

"So swearing seems to help people cope with pain," he said.

In that study, participants used a swear word of their own choice, Stephens said, because "swearing is quite a personal thing."

That might explain why several studies have found that swearing has a bigger emotional impact when you do it in your first language.

"When people swear in a second or third language, it just doesn't seem to have the same power or emotional impact, whatever you want to call it, as swearing in the mother tongue," Stephens said.

Excessive expletives exempted​

Stephens says he has some as-yet unpublished research to suggest that the intensity of the swear word matters too. People are better able to tolerate pain while dropping F-bombs, he says, than something less vulgar, like "bum."

"It does seem to be that the stronger the swear word, the more effect it has," he said.

But he has a warning for those known to swear like a sailor: Swearing's power has diminishing returns.

"We found that the people who swear the most in everyday life got the least benefit from swearing," he said. "So, you know, don't overdo it."
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/study-suggests-swearing-feels-good-1.6644882
 

US airport finds gun stuffed in chicken by traveller​

US transport officials have roasted a passenger online after they were caught trying to smuggle a gun on to a plane by hiding it inside a raw chicken.
The fowl plot was cracked by Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers at Florida's Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Airport.
The traveller's weapon was spotted before boarding stuffed inside the bird and wrapped in paper packaging.
TSA officers joked on Instagram that the scheme "wasn't even half-baked".

Officials didn't reveal who had hatched the plan, but photos posted to Instagram by the TSA showed officers examining the bird inside an airport screening area, before removing the gun and unwrapping it.
With the annual Thanksgiving holidays fast approaching, the agency leaned heavily into festive puns in their caption, quipping that its officers "are always working around the cluck to keep you safe".

"The plot chickens as we barrel our way closer to Thanksgiving," a TSA spokesperson wrote.
"We hate to beak it to you here, but stuffing a firearm in your holiday bird for travel is just a baste of time. This idea wasn't even half-baked; it was raw, greasy, and obviously unsupervised. The only roast happening here is this poor packing choice!"
"Feather you like it or not, there are rules for traveling with guns and ammunition," the TSA concluded.
Firearms aren't banned on US airlines, but they must be carried in checked baggage and have to be unloaded and placed in a locked hard-sided container.
Last year, the TSA said it had seized a record number of firearms from passengers at US airports. Around 85% of those taken were loaded, the agency said.
Travellers around the world have sometimes expressed exasperation at the strict nature of airport security.

But TSA officers' dedication to their task over the years has resulted in some bizarre finds, ranging from a chainsaw stored in some hand-luggage in New Orleans, a hand grenade found in New York and something the agency called a "meth burrito" in Houston.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-63564405
 
Top Bottom